Sylvester's determinant identity

From testwiki
Revision as of 16:06, 27 June 2022 by imported>PointlessUsername
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In matrix theory, Sylvester's determinant identity is an identity useful for evaluating certain types of determinants. It is named after James Joseph Sylvester, who stated this identity without proof in 1851.[1]

Given an n-by-n matrix A, let det(A) denote its determinant. Choose a pair

u=(u1,,um),v=(v1,,vm)(1,,n)

of m-element ordered subsets of (1,,n), where mn. Let Avu denote the (nm)-by-(nm) submatrix of A obtained by deleting the rows in u and the columns in v. Define the auxiliary m-by-m matrix A~vu whose elements are equal to the following determinants

(A~vu)ij:=det(Av[v^j]u[u^i]),

where u[ui^], v[vj^] denote the m−1 element subsets of u and v obtained by deleting the elements ui and vj, respectively. Then the following is Sylvester's determinantal identity (Sylvester, 1851):

det(A)(det(Avu))m1=det(A~vu).

When m = 2, this is the Desnanot-Jacobi identity (Jacobi, 1851).

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Linear-algebra-stub